
Robert Lee Parton Couldn’t Read or Write but Dolly Still Calls Him the Smartest Man She Knew
Dolly Parton never cared that her daddy couldn’t read or write, because in her eyes, he was a genius.
Robert Lee Parton didn’t have fancy degrees, but he had grit. Born into the hills of East Tennessee and tasked with helping raise a family of fifteen, Dolly’s father never had the luxury of finishing school. Instead, he worked with his hands, built a life for his wife and twelve children, and instilled in Dolly the values of hard work, humility, and heart. The man never penned a song or signed an autograph, but he sure signed his legacy into country music history.
When Dolly talks about her daddy, there’s a softness in her voice, like the scent of a wood stove in winter or the feeling of worn denim after a long day’s work. In her 2020 book Songteller: My Life in Lyrics, she called him “so smart” and “so precious,” explaining that despite being illiterate, Robert Lee had an intuitive mind for business. He knew how to run the numbers on a tobacco crop, how to trade, and how to stretch a dollar when there weren’t many to go around.
“He raised that whole family on his brains and hard work,” she wrote. “He knew how to count money. He knew what everything was worth.”
He was a sharecropper before running his own small tobacco farm and picking up construction gigs to make ends meet. They didn’t have much, but they had each other. And even in the leanest times, he made sure his family was fed, clothed, and cared for. Dolly once shared that her father couldn’t afford the doctor who delivered her, so he paid with a sack of cornmeal.
As a child, Dolly watched her father come home with hands torn from labor. She and her siblings would rub corn silk lotion into his skin, a nightly ritual that told its own story about sacrifice and love.
But it wasn’t just his hard work that left a mark on her, it was how much he believed in her. He didn’t understand the music business, but he understood pride. When a statue of Dolly went up in Sevierville, he’d sneak over at night with a bucket of soapy water in the bed of his truck to wash it clean. He didn’t make a show of it, just quietly honored his daughter the best way he knew how.
Later in life, that same quiet pride turned into a powerful partnership. When Dolly founded the Imagination Library, a nonprofit that mails free books to children every month, she did it with her father in mind. He helped her with the project, knowing firsthand what it meant to grow up without the written word. Dolly told him, “Don’t be ashamed. Let’s do something special.” And he did.
“I think deep down inside, my daddy was prouder of that than he even was of my career,” Dolly wrote.
The Imagination Library has since put books into the hands of millions of kids across the globe. And while the world knows Dolly as a superstar, her father knew her as his little girl and the Book Lady.
Robert Lee Parton passed away in 2000 at the age of 79, following a series of strokes. But his legacy didn’t die with him. It lives on in the lyrics of Dolly’s songs, in every child who opens a book from the Imagination Library, and in the quiet understanding that brilliance doesn’t always come from a chalkboard.
He couldn’t read a single word, but to Dolly, he wrote the most important story of all.